I agree with the twitter feed - these people were in a town that was failing them. Why not move them to a town where jobs are available to them and allow them to have a better opportunity available to them while letting the crop owners continue to build our food supply that is already in short supply. You people are quick to call someone a racist purely because the town was mostly low income - who says these people were African American?! I think it's more racist to assume that all low income people are African American! In addition, most farmers are not wealthy people and, of all the those in America today, these people work the hardest to assure that there is food on our tables. The last thing, as Americans, that we need to happen is to shorten our supply and to rely on foreign growers.

Attorney General Leslie Rutledge regularly bends the truth to suit her narrative of the day, but she gets extra credit for dragging George Soros into her re-election campaign.

Making kids happy, two wheels at a time.

Arkansas Public Service Commission Chair Ted Thomas is getting attention for calling out Trump administration climate policy. He even acknowledges the role of carbon burning and humans in climate change.

Khana Indian Grill in Fayetteville is a great option for casual dining.

In 1976, the fixers finally got tired
of swapping cash and whiskey for votes in Searcy County.

One day in September 1957, Bill Floyd traveled by bus to Little Rock for an afternoon doctor's appointment, but arrived early enough in the morning to satisfy his curiosity and witness history. Disembarking, he asked a man on a downtown street corner for directions to Central High School, site of violent protests over the Little Rock School Board's decision to enforce the U.S. Supreme Court's 1954 order to desegregate public schools.